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Sterling Digest, February 11 2013: a fading rally

Kipper Williams cartoon, The Guardian
So Carney is not the UK’s savior?

GBP ended last week in consolidation as the technicals were helped in large part to the fundamentals when UK economic data surprised on the strong side and incoming B0E governor Carney surprised markets by steering clear of his dovish Davos comments on monetary policy. All this helped sterling rally last week to new highs across the board. This week holds a light economic calendar from the UK which may allow sterling to continue its consolidation rally. However, watch the current market sentiment to change on a whiff of bad news. With CPI, retail sales, and the BoE Inflation Report out this week, any of these news events has the potential to send sterling back on its long term bear trend.

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Sterling Digest, February 4 2013: week of the central banker

Bank of England at Night - Arsat 30mm Fisheye lens on Flickr
BoE at night – What happens behind closed doors?

This is the week of central banks as the market looks ahead to 3 central bank announcements from the Bank of England, the European Central Bank and the Reserve Bank of Australia. After consolidating most of last week, sterling diverged in Friday’s price action weakening against every major currency except the JPY. While the USD weakened on a NFP miss against the EUR and NZD, it gained against the GBP. The reason is a fundamental one. The US economy is in better shape than the UK. While both were surprisingly disappointing, US GDP contracted by less than the UK GDP. UK manufacturing PMI missed expectations; US ISM exceeded expectations. The $FED is on hold; the BoE is dovish and likely to enact another round of QE. Following the announcements already from the BoJ, RBNZ, and FOMC, this week’s announcements should complete the fundamental differences in the major currencies. With the forex market now trading on fundamentals (and not risk appetite), the best trades now become the ones that exploit the stark differences in fundamentals.

 

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Sterling Digest, January 27 2013: follow the trend

KAL Cartoon in The Economist
Can the British economy really afford to abandon the EU?

Last week was epic for sterling. The $EURGBP rallied to new highs above the psychologically important 0.8500 level. The $GBPUSD, $GBPNZD, $GBPAUD, and $GBPCAD all fell to fresh 2013 lows early in the week heading to the Bank of England minutes release. However, when the BoE minutes revealed that it was ready to end quantitative easing and unemployment in the UK fell to new lows, sterling rallied off the lows. In fact, thank in large part to the Bank of Japan, the $GBPJPY rallied to its highest levels in over 2 years. Despite policy makers in the BoE calling for an end to QE, the economic realities of the UK may not allow that to happen. And since BoE meeting minutes are backward looking, sterling may not be able to sustain its Friday gains in this new week of trading. With a very light economic calendar from the UK this week, expect sterling to trade very technically and at the whims of the USD with the $FED rate decision looming mid-week.

 

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Sterling Digest, January 20 2013: Safety issues

Goodbye Europe. The Economist cover

Sterling has weakened considerably to kick off 2013 with several themes at play here. One is the fundamental fact that the British economy stands to enter a triple dip recession having ended 2012 with no growth. Secondly, the EU is looking  much more attractive to investors. While 2012 will be remembered as the year investor fled euros and parked their money in sterling and swiss francs, 2013 sees these same investors putting their money back in euros. Lastly, I have noticed that sterling is correlating to the USD much differently than it had in 2012. While a strong GBP saw a strong USD (and visa versa), that correlation is no longer. Now sterling is weak across the board with currencies of the stronger economies (CAD, AUD, NZD) leading the charge.

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Sterling Digest, January 5 2013: Trust the crosses

Cover artwork from The Economist 2012 Christmas double issue
Happy new year?

To kick off the new year, the global fundamentals still stink. Currency wars still rage across the globe. American politics continue to debase the world’s reserve currency. And after entering recession in 2012, the British economy is poised for depression in 2013. As terrible as the fundamental landscape seems, I agree with @kathylienfx (read her articles below). The trades that make the most sense in 2013 are the currency cross pairs. While the majors are mired in USD murkiness (fundamentals vs. risk appetite), the crosses more clearly reflect the fundamentals. And as such, these currency pairs seem to have the best trading opportunities in the current forex market environment.

 

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Sterling Digest, October 29, 2012: Stocktoberfest

In short, I needed to be at Stocktoberfest. Just the exposure to the ideas and wisdom of brilliant, seasoned people always jumpstarts motivation and passion. But the actual in-person connecting with the folks who came to Stocktoberfest was truly inspiring and encouraging for me, a young lady in her career in this industry. Today’s Digest is dedicated to archiving all the reflections and insights that is Stocktoberfest 2012. I was honored to be there. See you all next year!

 

Sterling Digest, May 23, 2012: flip-flop

Bank-of-England-Logo
Bank of England logo

Adam Posen’s flip-flop on QE makes the Bank of England more dovish especially as economic data continues to deteriorate at an alarmingly fast rate. While the $GBPUSD and $GBPJPY have been sterling weak, these pairs’ move lower is also tied to increased risk aversion. Conversely, sterling has remained very robust against the commodity dollars. Both the $GBPAUD and $GBPNZD have already made new highs on the week. Will tomorrow’s UK GDP release be the final nail in the GBP coffin?

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